No you can't get a individual fstab Entry for every Account
–
LonstonOct 24 '13 at 10:33

What are you trying to achieve, mount a certain volume on login? Only a single volume, just for your account, or different volumes for each user?
–
JoniOct 24 '13 at 10:52

You can use gvfs to do something similar.
–
MadMikeOct 24 '13 at 10:56

The answers below tell you how to get it mounted, but none of them (including mine) deal with the possibility that you may want only your user to be able to mount these partitions. If you want something like that then something further will be required. The difference with fstab is that it's a system file and only a superuser can modify it.
–
JoeOct 30 '13 at 20:14

5 Answers
5

In case we need to always mount a drive after we log in to our account but do not want this drive mounted at boot we may want to consider mounting by udisks. Below command will e.g. mount the drive `/dev/sdc1 to /media/<username> (no root permissions needed):

udisks --mount /dev/sdc1

This command can be added to a script, or put in autostart applications if needed.

So if you put this in a script (cd ~ && gedit mount_them.sh) and make the script executable you can add this script to your .bash_profile or .bashrc (.bash_profile is executed for login shells, while .bashrc is executed for interactive non-login shells). Adding something like this (pseudo code) would mount them for you:

Do you mean that you have several users of your system and you want them to have different access rights to different volumes on your machine?

If so, then we're in the same boat. I have a 'common' NTFS drive that I want to be available to any user of my machine. On the other hand I also have a 'work' NTFS drive that should be accessible only by me (save root, of course, but then again that's me).